General Baker, all of the distinguished guests
here on the platform and this great audience here in Convention Hall, I'm
sure you must know how very moved Pat and I are by your very warm reception.
We have been having some very exciting days
in these past weeks and some record crowds in many places. I recall earlier
this week when we were in Memphis, Tenn., we had 30,000 people standing
in the rain at the noon hour listening to a speech. I recall when we were
in western Pennsylvania where the rain was coming down in sheets and thousands
of people were on the streets and also came out to our rallies.
I recall just a few days ago when we went
into Boston, not expecting much of a crowd, and there in Boston we had
250,000 people who came to welcome us.
Earlier today we were in New York City. We
had great crowds there.
But I want to say this: That today in Philadelphia,
on the streets and in this auditorium, we have the greatest crowd of the
campaign, and we congratulate you - and, believe me, we need this crowd,
every one of you. We like it because we consider Pennsylvania to be a key
State. We must carry it, and with your help we will carry it this November.
I am delighted that all over the State of
Pennsylvania, by television, we are able to talk to the people of Pennsylvania
tonight, and I am delighted, too, that on this platform are leaders of
our party, as well as our candidates for the Congress, all of whom I am
very proud to support, and I particularly am happy that here on the platform
is my colleague in the U.S. Senate, Senator Hugh Scott, of the State of
Pennsylvania.
There are some more that ought to be mentioned,
but if I do I will not be able to finish in the time allotted on television.
So, I can only say: To all of you who have come out tonight, to all of
you who are giving us your time on television, we express our deep appreciation
and we want you to know that seeing a demonstration like this, that seeing
such crowds as we did today coming into Philadelphia, make us realize the
tremendous responsibility we have in this campaign and the tremendous responsibility
that the next President of the United States will have to the people of
this country - and it is to that point that I particularly want to address
my opening remarks.
In this crowd tonight I know are predominantly
members of my own party. The easy thing for me to do tonight would be to
say: "Since you're Republicans and I'm a Republican, I ask you to vote
for me on that ground alone."
I do not do that. I do not ask anybody here
or anybody listening to television to vote simply on the basis of my party
affiliation, if it happens to be yours.
My opponent in a speech last week indicated
that it was the party affiliation that counted. I tell you that when we
elect a President of the United States, particularly when we elect one
in this critical period of the history of this country, what must come
first is not the label a man wears, not his party, but what's best for
America, and it's on that basis I present the case to you.
And, so, I ask all of you to judge me tonight,
and in the balance of this campaign, on that test: What do you want for
America? What does America demand of the man who will next be the President
of this country?
This is a stern test. It is one which I want
you to put me to as well as my opponent, and in putting us to that test,
might I suggest some of the issues, some of the things you must be thinking
about, as you decide what your decision will be on November the 8th.
In the first place, consider for a moment
the things that you want, you as American citizens, in this great country
of ours.
I often think of this as I drive through the
streets, as we did today, as I see young people and old, shouting and cheering,
as I see men and women holding up their little children, one a 3-week-old
baby, I noted, for example, as we just left the airport, holding them up,
waving their hands, and then it makes me think : What do they want for
these? What is my responsibility to them - not only to ourselves,
but to our children and their future?
And these are the things that I think Americans
all are thinking about.
You look at the future and you want for our
children a better life than we have had.
This doesn't mean that we aren't the most
fortunate people on earth to be Americans and to live in this great country.
It simply means that we're a go-ahead people, that we want America to move
ahead, and as she moves ahead we want to leave no one behind - and this
is what we stand for in this campaign.
And, so, I say to you tonight: For these things,
as America moves ahead, we stand.
You want and we want better jobs for our people,
at higher wages. We want security for their old age. We want health protection.
We want better schools. We want progress in medical care. We want progress
in all of those various areas that spell the development of a great country
such as ours has experienced throughout the 175 years of its history.
And, so, tonight, I can, in truth, tell you
that in our platform and in the programs that I have announced and will
announce, that we will stand for and that I do stand for, programs that
I believe will bring the greatest progress that America has ever had, in
job opportunities, in health, in education, in science, in all these fields.
I tell you that, but you have a predicament because my opponent tells you
that he, too, stands for these things, and I'm sure that he believes that
he does, as I believe that I do.
And, so, consider the predicament of the voter.
What's he going to decide? How do you judge us? We say we are for these
good things for the American people. How do you select between the two?
And, so, I give you tonight some tests to
apply. First, you must look at our record, and when you look at our record,
I say that when you compare what this administration has done with what
the Truman administration did before it, in whatever test you want to make
- schools, jobs, housing, health - that we've got them licked, and that
is one thing the American people want.
I could give you statistics, but in every
one of these areas we could point out where we have made more progress,
built more schools, more hospitals, more highways, where jobs - as far
as real wages are concerned - have been better in this administration than
in its predecessor.
And, so, on the record I say we have something
to offer. Consider for a moment the record in the field of civil rights
in which so many Americans are justly interested, and in which the whole
Nation has an interest, an interest because it is essential, may I tell
you, essential in this country, apart from the other very great reasons
that we must stand firmly on this issue, that we deny to Mr. Khrushchev,
a man who has enslaved millions and who has slaughtered thousands, the
chance again to come to America and say, "You're denying rights to your
people," as he did last week.
And I say we will move forward in this field,
and I know our program will move, as it has moved in these last 7 years.
And here again I say that we're proud that
we initiated in 1957 the first civil rights law in over 80 years and that
we established a Civil Rights Commission, a Civil Rights Division in the
Justice Department. As a matter of fact, we had more progress in 8 years
than in 80 years preceding it.
They talked a good game, but we've done a
good game - and the American people know this. And the record shows that
our opponents have failed to enact the program that President Eisenhower
asked them to enact 3 years ago. They failed again this year. They failed
again when they had an opportunity after their convention in the special
session to act as President Eisenhower asked them to act.
And so I say to you, the people of this country
will judge us on our record, and I am also proud to say tonight that on
this issue, as on other issues, my running mate, Cabot Lodge, will stand
with me rather than against me and will work with me in this program.
And I am proud to say that we have discussed
this issue north, east, west, and south that in every one of the Southern
States I have visited I have discussed it, because this is one of the essentials
of American leadership - to lead the people in those fields where they
must be led if America is to progress.
And I would hasten to point out as well that
my opponent has failed to do so except in one appearance in the South,
in which he made only a fleeting reference, and I call upon him and his
running mate to talk the same in the North and the East and the West and
the South as Cabot Lodge and I are on this issue.
And, so, I say on the record: Whatever test
you want to apply, we have done a better job. But we don't just stand on
a record. We're here to build on it. I say that we have a program that
will produce more progress than even they will talk about. Why? First,
because our philosophy is right, and theirs, I believe, is wrong insofar
as the production of progress is concerned.
They say that in order to get progress in
any field the thing to do is to throw up our hands and to turn the problem
over to the Federal Government to have a massive new Federal program, to
weaken the States and to weaken the individual responsibility, and we say
that the way to progress in this Nation is not that way, but through increasing
responsibilities and opportunities for 180 million American citizens.
Oh, I know - I have heard the question raised:
"Mr. Nixon," some people have said, "you say you're for progress more than
your opponents. You say your programs will produce more. But how can you
say that when he says that his will cost more, that he will spend more
money than you will?"
And I'll give you a very simple answer. When
he makes promises about the money he's going to spend in all these fields,
remember, he isn't spending Jack's money, but your money, and the American
people know that.
And I say tonight the fact that we do have
programs which can produce more by spending less of your money at the Federal
level, that this is a recommendation for those programs, and not a reason
to vote against them, because in all of these areas let us remember again
that how America grows depends not simply on what the Federal Government
does and spends, but on what all Americans do, the Federal Government,
the State government, but most of all what free Americans are allowed and
encouraged to do - and here again we see the secret of progress which we
always work to improve and which unfortunately, their programs would blunt.
And, so, whatever field you wish to choose,
I say in these areas of progress we have the best case to present. But
let me turn now to another concern, one that I have found is the one overriding
issue of this campaign. It's the future of our young people in a very different
way. We want better jobs, housing and health. All these things we want
for our children; but, above everything else, we want them and we want
ourselves to be around to enjoy the good life we have in this country.
And, so, the most important test, the sternest
test to which you must put the two candidates for the Presidency and the
Vice Presidency is this: Which of the two men can best lead the United
States and the free world and keep the peace without surrender?
And I tell you tonight - I tell you tonight
- that I am proud of our ticket in this respect. I am proud of it not because
I can speak of my own experience, because that would be presumptuous but
I can certainly speak of my running mate's, and I'll say this: No man in
the world today has had more experience and no one could have done a better
job, in my opinion, of fighting for the cause of peace and freedom than
our candidate for Vice President, Henry Cabot Lodge.
And we will work together, work together to
strengthen the instruments of peace, like the United Nations and the Organization
of American States.
But there's one other thing you must know
about us, which is vitally important: We know the man who threatens the
peace of the world and his colleagues. We have sat across the conference
table from them. We've had the opportunity to deal with them, and if I
may say so, we've done a pretty good job of dealing with them in the past,
and we'll do a pretty good job in the future.
Oh, I know in the case of the record of this
administration there's been a lot of criticism of it in the foreign policy
area, and it's the responsibility of our opponents to criticize where they
think it's wrong, but I say it isn't necessary to run America down to build
her up, and I also point this out: I also point this out: I noted recently,
for example, a statement of my opponent to this effect, that he made in
upper New York State. He said, "I'm tired of reading in the paper what
Mr. Khrushchev is doing. I'm tired of reading in the paper what Mr. Castro
is doing. I want to be able to read in the paper what the President of
the United States is doing."
Let me tell you something. If he would stop
talking and start reading, he'd find out what President Eisenhower is doing.
No. He hasn't been doing the spectacular things
that Mr. Khrushchev is doing. He hasn't been making a fool of himself in
the United Nations, thank God.
No, he hasn't been trying to muscle into the
Congo unilaterally to take over that newly independent country. That's
a very sensational thing. It makes news. It makes exciting reading.
But President Eisenhower has done the right thing. He has seen that America
has worked patiently with the United Nations to save the independence of
this country rather than to destroy it - and this we can be proud of.
And, looking to the future, what do we say
we will do? We know the men with whom we are dealing. We will keep America,
first, the strongest nation in the world militarily, because we're the
guardians of peace, and the American people, I know, will pay whatever
is necessary to maintain that position in the world.
We will keep our economy growing so that Mr.
Khrushchev is never able to realize his bet of attempting to catch the
United
States and pass us, and, believe me, he will never catch us in 7 or
70 years if we stay true to the principles that have made this country
great.
We will keep the diplomacy of this country
firm, without being belligerent, always willing to go the extra mile in
order to negotiate those differences that we have with the Soviet or anybody
else, but never paying the price of freedom of ourselves or others in order
to negotiate because that is not the road to peace. That is the road to
surrender, to war, and we will avoid it.
These are the things we will do. And, in addition
to that, we will remain true - we will keep before the world - the tremendous
ideals which the people of Philadelphia and of Pennsylvania know so much
about, because this country started here in 1776, and, more important than
our military strength, more important than our economic strength, is the
strength of our ideals, and I pledge to you that Cabot Lodge and I will
never forget that what will count in this struggle for the world will be
our faith in God, our belief in the dignity of all men, our recognition
that the rights that men have come not from men, but from God and, therefore,
cannot be taken away from men.
Why are these things important? Why are they
important when you're dealing with a man like Mr. Khrushchev who is simply
an atheistic materialist?
I'll tell you why. Because from the time of
our foundation in 1776, America was then weak militarily, weak economically,
but was one of the strongest nations in the world because we stood for
what was right - and I pledge to you we will continue to stand for what
is right, and we will carry the spirit of Philadelphia to the world.
Thank you.